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Showing posts with label Virgin Blue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Virgin Blue. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Sydney-Los Angeles game of chicken continues

If you're a passenger thinking about flying between Sydney and Los Angeles, things can't get much better. If you're one of the four airlines that fly that route, things can't get much worse. Earlier this month Delta became the fourth airline to fly between the two cities, joining Virgin-backed startup V Australia, which had entered the market this past February. They joined Qantas and United, which have shared a cozy duopoly for the past 15 years on the route (since Continental stopped flying it), and the result is a four-way game of chicken and a fare war that won't end until one airline drops out - all amidst a dismal business travel climate.

The airlines are resorting to tactics that have an air of desperation to them. Qantas is allowing kids to fly for free on the route, and when you buy a business class ticket, you get two for the price of one - deals that the airline has labeled "unprecedented." Said a Qantas spokesperson: "This is the first sale of its kind for many, many years." Qantas, which used to control nearly 75% of traffic on the route, now flies around half. Before things got bad, the airline made around a quarter of its cash on the route, and even though it's losing money there like everyone else, Qantas has interest enough to stick it out and wait for the situation to improve.

Then there's United, which has come out with the uncharacteristically ballsy proclamation that it would match any competitor's fare between Sydney and Los Angeles. "United is determined and committed to matching the initiatives of other carriers and we'll compete aggressively on price if that's what's required for us to protect our business here," said their Pacific vice president, James Mueller, quoted in The Australian. "I look at our services to Australia as sort of our southern cornerstone of our overall Pacific product offering... [we] fully intend to keep operating here indefinitely." According to the article, United's revamped premium cabins have paid off, with the airline's market share on the route holding steady (for now). United has been flying the route for nearly 25 years, ever since it purchased Pan Am's Pacific route network in April 1985.

And then there are the new entrants: V Australia and Delta. Things have become more complicated now that Delta has announced a joint venture with V Australia parent Virgin Blue, to say nothing of the latter's codeshare agreement with United on domestic flights from Sydney. Some analysts are predicting that one of the airlines could leave the market as early as October, but which one? Both Qantas and United are so well-entrenched in the route that I don't see either giving it up; this leaves Delta and V Australia. Some have said that Delta, being the larger of the two, won't be the one to pull out, but I'm not so sure. If Delta does drop LAX-Sydney, they might lose their claim to flying to all six inhabited continents, but right now it can't be much more than another international route for them. V Australia, on the other hand, doesn't have anywhere else to turn to if they drop the route, apart from service to Los Angeles from Brisbane and Melbourne.

So, if you're planning a trip to Australia, book now while prices are low - before the game of chicken comes to an end.

photo by code20photog from Flickr

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

A Virgin interlining agreement

photo courtesy flightglobal
'Virgin' airlines Virgin America and V Australia (part of Australian carrier Virgin Blue) announced that they're going to start a US-Australian 'interline' agreement that allows travelers to book travel on both airlines between the US and Australia. For example, if you lived in Boston, you could fly from Boston to Los Angeles on Virgin America and then from Los Angeles to Sydney on V Australia, all on a single ticket.

Despite the press releases heaping praise on "a seamless "Virgin" experience," an interlining agreement really doesn't make the relationship between the rather disparate Virgin brands any closer. Most airlines have various interlining agreements; for example, United and American have an interlining agreement with each other, and V Australia and Delta announced one back in March. For the traveler, this usually means that you don't have to retrieve your luggage in the stop-over airport and check it in again for the next flight, as you would have to do if you were traveling on two airlines that didn't have an interlining agreement.

An interline agreement shouldn't be confused with a code-share agreement. That's when an airline can issue a flight number for a given flight, even if its code-share partner is actually the one operating it. (This is a common practice among airline alliance members. For example, US Airways flight 5947 between Spokane, WA and Denver is really operated by United Airlines flight 812.) Both airlines can then sell tickets on the same flight.

As of yet, there's been no announcement of any code-sharing between Virgin America and V Australia. But fellow 'Virgin' companies Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Blue already codeshare.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Branson launches V Australian

As an Open Skies agreement between the United States and Australia takes effect, Richard Branson's newest addition to the Virgin fleet was announced earlier this week. V Australia, a division of Australian carrier Virgin Blue, will fly from Sydney to Los Angeles starting in December, competing with Qantas and United (which are the two airlines that currently fly the route). Branson said that "there is going to be very fierce competition, as there is with Virgin Blue and Qantas in Australia, and fares will definitely drop quite dramatically across this route... Our philosophy is never to go out with an empty seat."

Fares are relatively cheap - V Australia's return economy seats start at $1899. A special promotional round-trip fare of $777 for the first 1000 US passengers to book sold out quickly. In terms of aircraft, V Australia will start out with a single Boeing 777-300ER (it has ordered 6 total). Right now, Los Angeles is the only concrete destination, but the airline has also been interested in flying to Japan. It has also applied to the US Department of Transportation for approval to operate from Sydney to San Francisco, Las Vegas, Seattle, and New York.